2. Indiana Jones
and the Last Crusade
In the 1989 movie,
nerdy Professor Henry
Jones Jr. (Indy) tells his
students that “Seventy
percent of archaeology
is done in the library.”
3. Indiana Jones
and the Kingdom of the
Crystal Skull
In the final 2008 movie,
Indy hops on Mutt’s bike
while trying to escape
from Russian agents.
They ultimately crash into
the library’s reading room.
As they climb back onto the bike, Indy shouts to the kids who
are studying, “if you want to be an archeologist, you have to
get out of the library!”
5. Who is ProQuest?
• Headquartered in Ann Arbor, MI, with key offices in
Cambridge (UK), Seattle, Louisville and Bethesda
• 1800+ Employees, >$600M Revenue
• Content provider to more than 12,000 academic,
government, corporate and public libraries
• Approximately 300 web database research products
6. Largest Commercial Archive of Information
in the World
In 1938, ProQuest
began an innovative
project to microfilm
the earliest English
books to preserve
them from the
devastation of
World War II.
7. Over the years, ProQuest has amassed a collection
of six billion pages of information.
8. A Full Suite of Products to
Help Library Patrons Find Their Ancestors
9. PROQUEST
GENEALOGY
CENTER
African Historic Map
HeritageQuest American Works
Online Heritage Library Edition
Ancestry ProQuest History Vault
(government
Library Edition Obituaries documents)
Sanborn Archival
Historical Fire Insurance Microfilm
Newspapers Maps Collections
11. U.S. Historical Newspapers
The New York Times
Wall Street Journal
Washington Post
The Christian Science Monitor
Los Angeles Times
Chicago Tribune
Atlanta Constitution
The Boston Globe
Hartford Courant
New York Tribune / Herald Tribune
San Francisco Chronicle
The Baltimore Sun
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Detroit Free Press
Indianapolis Star
The Arizona Republican
Cincinnati Enquirer
Nashville Tennessean
Newsday
Louisville Courier-Journal
12. International Historical Newspapers
The Global and Mail
The Guardian and The Observer
The Irish Times and Weekly Irish
Times
The Scotsman
Times of India
Toronto Star
The Jerusalem Post / Palestine
Post
Chinese Newspaper Collection
North China Herald
The China Press
The China Critic
China Weekly Review
13. Black Historical Newspapers
Atlanta Daily World
The Baltimore Afro-American
Chicago Defender
Cleveland Call & Post
Los Angeles Sentinel
New York Amsterdam News
The Norfolk Journal & Guide
The Philadelphia Tribune
Pittsburgh Courier
14. Jewish Historical Newspapers
The American Hebrew &
Jewish Messenger
The Jewish Advocate
The American Israelite
Jewish Exponent
16. NewspaperARCHIVE.com Background
• Commercial online
database of digitized
newspapers which
includes 130M pages
of content from
6000+ newspapers
• Previously sold in
the library markets
as Access
NewspaperARCHIVE
.com
17. NewspaperARCHIVE Library Edition – Key
Differences from ProQuest Historical Newspapers
• Content is digitized at
the page level (not the
article level)
• There aren’t article types
• All parts of every page are
fully searchable
• Not necessarily full runs
of any individual title
• Not on the ProQuest
Platform
19. NewspaperARCHIVE Library Edition
Interfaces
• NewspaperARCHIVE Public Library Edition
• Same interface as the consumer product
• Focus of messaging is on genealogy and family history
• Search-by-name is featured
• NewspaperARCHIVE Academic Library Edition
• Focus of the messaging is on historical research and
local history
• Keyword searching is featured
• Search-by-name has been removed
4/17/2013 19
21. 1940 Census
African American Congressman
Autobiography
Biography
Census and Constitution
Census and Depression
Civil War
Civil War Military
Haunted House
Historical Crime
How Life Influences Art
Immigration
Irish American
Records in Your Community
Revolutionary War
Trail of Tears
War of 1812
Women Suffrage Movement
World War One Mobilization for War
World War Two
37. Alfred Moen, 84
Whose Hands Found Need for a New Faucet
By WILLIAM H. HONAN
New York Times
Published: April 21, 2001
Alfred Moen, who in the 1940's invented the single-handled
faucet in a fit of anger after twisting on a conventional two-
handled faucet and accidentally burning his hands, died
Tuesday at his home in Destin, Fla. He was 84.
It was while he was a mechanical engineering student at the University of Washington,
working in a garage to pay his tuition, that Mr. Moen made his painful discovery. ''The hot
water came on sooner than I had expected,'' he told his company's newsletter. ''It got me to
thinking that you ought to be able to get what you want out of a faucet. The more I thought
about it, the more I was convinced that a single-handled mixing faucet was the answer, so I
began to make some drawings.'‘ His first design was for a double-valve faucet with a cam to
control the two valves, but the manufacturer he showed it to was not impressed.
From 1940 to 1945, Mr. Moen made several other designs, but with the advent of World War
II he could not find a manufacturer free to start production. He went to work as a tool
designer at a military shipyard plant in Seattle,…
42. The school was once deemed the most beautiful
high school west of the Mississippi and featured at
the Chicago World's Fair in 1933.
43. Children Influences
on Kitchen Design
• Younger than five
years old: Safety
• Age 5-12: Places for
kids to play or work
• Age 13 or older:
Ability to have two or
more cooks in the
kitchen at one time
46. ProQuest Genealogy Resources
http://prq.st/GenTools
Available today, this page brings together all of our
genealogy training materials in one place. Librarians are
welcome to link directly to this page from their library’s
website.
• 2-minute Videos • Continuing Education
• Training Webinars • Bookmarks
• Tips and Guides • Posters
• Product Trials • And more
• Marketing Toolkits